New Zealand - OECD Economic Outlook 2019

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New Zealand Economic growth is projected to remain around 2½ per cent in 2020-21. Exports are set to decelerate and consumption will lose momentum, reflecting diminishing net migration inflows and lower housing wealth gains. On the other hand, business investment is expected to strengthen in response to rising labour costs and a falling cost of capital, thereby easing tight capacity constraints. Fiscal policy is currently expansionary, turning close to neutral in 2020 and contractionary in 2021. The central bank has recently cut the policy rate by 50 basis points to 1% and is expected to make two further 25-basis-point cuts by mid-2020, which are needed to increase inflation towards the mid-point of the target band. It is also planning to raise bank capital requirements substantially, which would reduce risks but increase credit costs. Economic growth is stable Economic growth has eased to around 2½ per cent. Household consumption has moderated on the back of slower net migration and smaller housing wealth gains. Despite historically high capacity utilisation and the low cost of capital, business investment remains subdued, as business confidence has been depressed by heightened uncertainty over global economic conditions, concerns about government policy, the costs and availability of labour and tight profit margins. However, residential investment has strengthened considerably, helping to ease housing shortages. Prices for New Zealand’s commodity exports remain high by historical comparison, supporting income and economic activity. The labour market is tight, with the unemployment rate below the estimated structural rate and wage growth edging up, partly reflecting scheduled increases in the minimum wage rate, which is set to rise to NZD 20 per hour by 2021, one of the highest levels relative to the median wage in the OECD. Inflation remains slightly below the mid-point of the Reserve Bank’s target band.

New Zealand Net migration has peaked and consumption is set to slow Y-o-y % changes 7

← Real private consumption

Thousands 70

Net migration¹ →

6

60

90

10

88

5

86

0

84

10

-5

82

0

-10

40

3

30

2

20

1

2019

2021

94

15

4

2017

Capacity utilisation →

25

92

50

2015

% 96

← Real business investment

20

5

0

Business investment remains subdued Y-o-y % changes 30

2011

2013

2015

2017

2019

2021

80

1. RBNZ projections. Net migration data refer to working-age (15 and over) migrants. Source: Reserve Bank of New Zealand (2019), Monetary Policy Statement, August; New Zealand Institute of Economic Research (2019), Capacity Utilisation, Business Opinion; and OECD Economic Outlook 106 database. StatLink 2 https://doi.org/10.1787/888934045791

OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2019 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2019


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